have the shape, form, costume of, dress up, smarten or adorn oneself, be dressed or clad, put on or wear Conjugation of تَزَيَّا (form-V final-weak)...
(archaic) clad) (transitive) To adorn or cover with clothing; to dress; to supply clothes or clothing. to feed and clothe a family; to clothe oneself extravagantly...
clothen (transitive, intransitive, reflexive) To clothe; to put clothing on (oneself, another). (transitive, reflexive) To furnish with clothes. (transitive)...
[Act V, scene i]: A spirit I am indeed; But am in that dimension grossly clad Which from the womb I did participate. 1638, Thomas Herbert, Some Yeares...
place is quite cool. Let's stay here. (figurative, of clothes) scantily clad (pleasantly cool): 涼爽/凉爽 (liángshuǎng); (Jin) 涼哨/凉哨; (Hokkien) 秋凊 (chhiu-chhìn)...
molded plastic […] But at construction sites, we sheet-metal the sides. Cladding, it's called. Otherwise, people come along and punch holes through them...
down, the two took long swims seaward or cruised about in Gerald's dory, clad in their swimming-suits; and Selwyn's youth became renewed in a manner almost...
disaster, destruction, accident Synonyms: plāga, incommodum, dētrīmentum, clādēs, interitus, perniciēs, exitium, vulnus, calamitās, incommoditās, pestis...
Dodd, Mead & Company, 1903, →OCLC, page 421: She that has [chastity], is clad in compleat steel. A honing steel, a tool used to sharpen or hone metal blades...
went to’ds de back, ma’am.” The negro opened the door and slid his legs, clad in army O.D. and a pair of linoleum putties, to the ground. “‘I’ll go git...